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The Brussels Post, 1948-6-16, Page 7What Goes On In The World 13y Norman Blair Russia 1)0e.s Russia really :1111 lrnl> v 111) peeve? Thal is the `eti•l 11111 jinn wire it milt to world affair;; and a highly experienced oh eru•r of uch things, el:pecially as they apply to th 1,and of the Sl,( t answers it in this manner — "Ittissia 11)1111 really end truly lik pence -- for a 111 ile'e ire gees on to ;sentent the reasons wily this i. so, Ifere are solve of theta, 1. "lie great masses of PeePle do not t war —this i; a; true e' Russia as of any other nation. After the long and fierce struggle of the last war, their nerve; are still on e11gi and they want 0 rest. 2, Russia is no 111o1•e rtratly inc war than the United States. Coal, steel atld oil prodectinu are still far below the mark; ainl b cause of shortage of lr s the •igrictiltural output is notl11 ig like what Moscow wants. 3. The people of the Soviets steed a period of relaxation, There is plenty of dissatisfaction and grumbl- ing — under 're surfare, of course, rcgardin the shortage of consumer goods. With a period of peace as- s, red, nlnch manpower could he releas I from the riled services to help industry and agriculture, ' \Vitllotlt any • tea,, since the Y..lta C:onfcrenc Moscow has been extending its control over the entire area east of the Trieste -Stettin line, r ' he exception of (.recce and, to a certain extent, Finland. Entire political and economic systems have been sec -'t away, It would be more convenient Inc el -ascot, to have a period of calm i1 which to consoli- date Cee a chang's. These are some of the reasons this observer gives for believing that the Krenilin really wants peace — for a whi'e, But le Hasn't mentioned one that , ight to more powerful than all these p t together. Rela- tions between Britain and the United States have been strained to a griever" degree by what has gone on in Palestine. The Russians are well aware of this, and are watching t'• situation closely, hoping — no doubt —. that the Arai -Israel wed; %rile drive these two great nations still further apart. With discord between the 'West- ern Allir, Russia's chance for real world dolni'anon would be ever so much bettor. So perhaps Mr. Stalin was sincere when he said he'd be glad to enter into discussions with the Unite,' States -- maybe Ile figuree that, at this juncture, the "waiting game" is the best one for Russia to ploy. Great Britain At Scarboreue in Yorkshire, the British Labor !'arty held its third annual conventi '0 since coming into offic• hast in July, 1945, Men and women connected with the move- ment gathered together to take stock, ,int with pride, and air their grievant -es, ..s is the custom with Br'tisl political parties. More then 1201) dulcet fes, repre- senting something like five million T,aborites, were in attendance; and as a New York correspondent plat it, "The Wren at Srarhnrrnag4 were 00 collection of :trrot-corner agita- tors or 50eialist soanho0 orators". Thee felt the sphering responsibili- ties of office." The stood that eleo tcterized the nbcetii'O was, in general, our of pride. Seale -eel!, that fall employ - meet had relieved the working clarses of fears of hunger that haunted it since the industrial re- voluton were recieved with cheers and applause, le three years Labor hail achieved nationalization of the of Israel —• Although t 0 uuntlari s were set by Zionist !•aders in their proclamation of ride tnrlenec, they recently de - eared that tbr; controlled all the towns and villages in the al•ea assigned to thein by the 1IN partition pl'ul, Map slims lite ;lcliish and ,krab stapes w'til Major towns in each. haul: of liw;laud. of civil aviation, ,1f tl'all,pore ,' +al, elv,lfirity, rail- way 5 :mel oversee.. iseennmic;ition, It had pa'.ed 'rFti-lotion fur free lae,li a) 0,rtice to all Itrit)ua, for referin in I'arliament:Hy r,'preseit- taiou, together wi1)1 liberation of I Imlil. Burnet. i',da-tau end Ceylon. .11th„tt4,)1 there erre several clashes one group deueandcd that 0riteie sheddd "declare it:: iudepen- deuce from the I;nice 1 States", when it Pane to t' it close of the cotleeJl- tiine, party unity seemed strung, Government leadership was firmly le tier ;a illy. lint in spite of this, there are :'1)4115 that Labor may be getting ready to slake suns melees - skins to the middle-class viewpoint, line of these was in 1lerbertMorri- srnl's statement that once the nation- alized programs already under way —such 114 iron and steel—are com- plete/. nothing further along this lino is contemplated. Such roncessious point to the fact teat 1050 is not so far off -- and that the heads of the Labor Party realize that when election time rolls around, it will need plenty of votes from outside its own ranks if it is to re- main in power. The Middle East While the British Governetent says it has no further interest in Palestine except 'us a member of the United Nations, actually the British are still deeply involved, not only in the IToly end, but in the entire Middle East. There are, for example, Britain's treaties with Trans-Jordan, L•aq, and Egypt, to say nothing of her close connections with the balance of the Moslem world, stretching through Southern Arabia and Iran to Pakistan. Involved in some of these connections are monetary sub- sidies, provisions for arms, and the loan of British officers to train and con nand native forces. - Exercising an unheard but still dominant role in the platter is Middle Eastern oil. Then there are the British Imperial bases, starting at Gibraltar and ending- at Aden, also t) necessity of keeping the Red Sea, the Suez Canal and the Mediterranean open to the British Empire, All this means that in the eyes of British Foreign Office dignitaries nothing is of much greater import- ance titan the retention of Arab friendship. When forced to a choice in 1439, as war approached, Britain swung to the Arab side; and, whether consciously or not, that seems to be what she is doing now. Mr. Bevin for one, never con- cealed his dislike for partitioning Palestine, nor his sympathy with the Arab case, Nor has the Foreign Secretary concealed his resentment toward President Truman and American Jewry, whom. he blanks for the failure to achieve a compro- mise in Palestine. Only recently the powerful Manchester Guardian sail, "One cannot quite avoid the suspicion that Mr. Bevin has a cer- tain pleasure in making things as awkward as possible for the United Na tions." Germany .Almost three years ago, when it was decided to putt Berlin tinder the joint rude of Britain, France, Russia and the United States, a body call- ed The Konuuandatura was created for that purpose. In a recent issue of Life Magazine a correspondent gives a vivid picture of how this body operates—or perhaps fails to operate would be better—and of the mounting tension between Russia curl the other three nations. Some quotations from this article follow: "It is the Russians who do most of the talking, They are led by Major General Ko t i k o v— who 1110115 his lips as little as possible when speaking — Kotikov says 'I have a number of statements to make'„ "For the next four hours Kotikov reacts these statements — a series of speeches charging the Western powers with breaking Komunanda- tura agreements. He reads them in Russian in a dull voice — at the finish of each statetnent the inter- preters take over, prolonging the agony with full translations into English and French, The bored conferees sag in their chairs —" "More than an hour passes be- fore the original speech and its translations are completed. Then the British general replies in cold anger 'General Kotikov's mind 41401115 entirely taken up with what goes on in the Western sectors. I'd like to ask him if be world occa- sionally get his mind on this own sector', France's General Gaueval is more moderate. America's Col- onel Frank Howley snaps 'I con- sider this an unsatisfactory reply to nay earlier request that some- thing be done to protect the Ger- nldns Is this city against kidnaping. I don't consider this an honest answer — I will tell General Koti- kov to keep out of our sector. — 'I'hc greatest gift 410 cold give workmen of Berlin would be free - dont of fear front snatching. Are there any farther matters to dis- cuss?" "Yes," says Kotikov, smiling.for the first time, "I must ask your patience, gentlemen" He produces another speech. Peace! It's Wonderful! New Power Plant—Crews work hard on the new $20,000,000 Ontario Hydro power project •in the northland on the Mississagi River. On top of Knob Hill workers drill rock for founda- tion of concrete (nixing plant. One slip here and a man would topple to almost certain death in canyon. New roads have been built for trucks carrying away the tons of rock blasted front rugged walls between which the river still foams freely. In foreground is newly built bridge. Main dam site is at right in this picture. Sports — And One Thing or Another By FRANK MANN HARRIS ("A Sixbit Critic") It looks very much as though, ere many \reeks have passed, folks will be referring to 11r. Leo Duro- cher—if at all—as "the former ball- player". In fact we wouldn't be too greatly surprised if, by the time these words pole their heads up in print, Baseball will already have de- cided that it can get along without Lippy Leo just as well, or even better. * * * Durocher will be missed, beyond the shadow of a doubt; but missed after the planner of the old lady whose big family of sons and daugh- ters had all grown up and left her. "Don't you miss them?" inquired a sympathetic visitor. "Don't you want them back? The' old lady thought over this proposition for a space. "Yes, I misses 'em and I wants 'cm" she slowly answered. "But somehow or other T misses 'em a whole lot more than I wants 'em." * * * Now we're not going to deny that, in his day, Durocher was a good, scrappy ball -player, of the type that battles till the last out and even afterward. The whole trouble seems to be that he suffers frpin an occupational disease espe- cially common to athletes—the sort of disease which, unless drastic measures are taken promptly, be- comes steadily worse,' with the pas- sage of time, Phychiatrists call it "delusions of grandeur." In the bay -rush and canned -heat set we refer to it as "swelling of the noggin", * * * Durocher has recently blasted his way into the ranks of authorship— move over, Mr. Shakespeare please! —with an autobiographical tome en- titled "The Dodgers and Me"; and it is this volume which, unless all the signs and portents are strictly haywire, will before long be the cause of his permanent divorce from the game which gave him a full measure of prominence and pelf. And no wonder either. Leo pro- fesses to love Baseball with an un- dying devotion. Baseball might very well reply in the words of the old song, "It's all very well to dis- semble your love, but why do you kick me downstairs?" * *'' * For in his first, and we trust last, literary optts Durocher portrays practically everybody connected with the game—himself and Branch Rickey, in that order, excepted—as being more or less closely COtltlect- ed with the genus pediculus, or as they'd phrase it at The Arts and Letter' Club, just plain lousy. Only he and his boss emerge from the morass of Durocher's prose pure and unspotted; and when it comes to Rickey the author daubs on the whitewash and gold leaf with such a lavish hand that it is even more sickening than his smears of all the others. * * * Take, for example, his treatment of Babe Ruth. Durocher suspected that Ruth wanted to be manager of The Dodgers — a job which Leo doesn't hold at the moment, but for which ate had secret ahllhit10n8, Words passed between the two, and Ruth threatened Dm'ociter- with bodily violence. * * * "I leaped off ally seat," writes the author tersely. "We tangled." What Leo somehow overlooks mentioning ,o is that, at the moment of the tang- ling, The Babe was sitting on a chair, and that Leocourageously pushed him into a locker. * * * Frank Frisch, Bobo Newsom, Luke Hamlin, Burleigh Grimes, Casey Stengel, Larry McPhail, and Uncle Robby Robinson are just a few of the many who are held up to the light by the budding author —and the light is always murky and unflattering, ,to say the least. Even when he professes to admire a man, there's ever the touch of the tar - brush. "Grimes, although I was strong for the guy, was not exactly a streamlined manager either. He always kept a red handkerchief in his hip pcket and gave his signals with it," is a sample of what we mean. It's a good thing Leo was "strong for the guy". Otherwise, who knows what a description of Burleigh would have been recorded for posterity? * * * You can almost dcbuct the tears in the author's eyes when he de- picts the perfidy of Frankie Frisch, with whom he had been especially palsy. "I felt as if I had been hit on the jaw with a pitched ball," is ilow the describes his feelings at finding out that Frisch wanted to trade him away to Brooklyn. This, from Durocher, who only a few weeks ago traded Stauky to The Braves for no other reason titan that Eddie was too popular with Dodger fans and who—at the time of the Frisch incident, was trying to grab off Frankie's job as Cardi- nal's manager. * * * However, you must read it all for yourself—sante time when you land in a hotel room that isn't even equipped with a Gideon Bible. Space limitations prevent us from giving you any more of this masterpiece of ill -concealed venom, back-biting and self -adulation. As one review- er put it, "When Leo got through he must have had a terrible Charley - horse from patting himself on the back."—which just about sums it up. Researchers report that the United States now is producing one-third more manufactured goods per capita than it did before the war. RELIEF FROM ECZEMA A Lady wiliest 1 had Ecsema break out on my tee and trlod elmo,l sverylhing, but It did no good, Then I tried Mecca and got relief hon the smarting. and Itching. 1 cannot speak too hlghiy of Mecca. ``MECCA `oJNTMENT ISSUE 24 - 1948 Ontario to Have More Game Fish An extensive program of fisheries research is being undertaken in Algonquin Park through the co- operative support of the Dlepart- nlelit of Lands and Forests, the University of Toronto and the On- tario Research Commission. The investigation is directed towards an understanding of the factors respon- sible for the production of game fish in Ontario's northland waters, * * * For many years the laboratory and resident Park staff have co- operated in the planting of speckled trout yearlings into a large number of lakes. Few instances of definitely improved fishing resulted from this procedure. In later years, the plant- ing program has been reduced to the planting of marked fish into a few lakes, which did show improvement previously, and the experimental in- troduction of fry and yearling trout into feeder streams, small perman- ent streams in which trout could be expected to remain for at least a year before moving down to the lakes. * * * Animal planlcton serve as food for the young of most fish after hatch- ing. Some fish feed upon this microscopic food as adults. The larger game fish—trout, bass, pike - perch and lunge, are the final aqua- tic carnivores in this food chain, feeding on minnows, perch, herring and the young of all species. The experimental investigation r the fisheries of Algonquin Park in- volves each link in the chain of events leading to the desirable species of game fish. It is provid- ing a more complete evaluation of the factors which influence the pro- duction of living matter in the aqua- tic environment. Balaclava, scene of the famous Charge of the Light Brigade dur- ing the Crimean War, once was a Greek colony, and is described poet- ically by Iiotner, DOES INDIGESTION WALLOP YOU BELOW THE BELT? Help Your Forgotten "28" For Tho Kind 01 Relief That Helps Make You Rarin' To Go ortketoor8tofddnbelweblt—inyu2foot bow So when indigestion strikes, try nomothing that helps digestion in the stomach AND below the holt, Plawehto giyoneeded help totthatl forgotten 28foot" of T6ke ono Cnrd'tor'e Little Liver Pill Wore and ono tarter meal. Tnko them awarding to of thorn main They help mime In yoularger meoh AND bowels —help you digest what you have oaten a 01000) folks got tho kind of Ostiaf that Ltom, be etubeoyou get 6ho gonullep Oratohoed to r.. ittle Livor Pile from your druggist -550 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING AGENTS. WANTED OILS, GREASES, TIRES, insocticidoa, Electric Fence Centrallere, House and Barn Paint, Iteof Coalinga, oto. Diad- ems wanted. Write Warco Grease 4: 011 Lim!• tad, Toronto. —BABY CHICKS PULI4,T BARGTAINS: Now Ratnpehires While Reeks 6 weok0 old 16.01. 8 week° old. Barred Rorke nun -Hexed 26.46, pullets 96.16, eoelu'rele 20.06. light Sumas X New Hatnpshlreo, Barred Ruck X Now Heeneblra nun -sexed 26.46, pullet, 96,06, coekerelo 20.06. Also two and four week old 1n many broads. Day old euokerele June prime; Barred Roc11e, Light Sussex X New Hampuhlree. Barred hooks X New Ihatupahlree, Bleak Auetralor5n, Light Sussex, New Hampohlroe X Barred Rook 9.86. White Leghorn° 1.00, Barred Rock X White Leghurne 2.60. Send for JUDO prlco- 1101. TWed.11o Chip Hatelterie, Limped, For - 0,10, Ontario, FREE 100 COCKERELS with Saws, order of 100 Leghorn Pullet. wo will give 100 Rock X Log• Sussex X Leg. or N. Kamp X Lea pollute priced at 160. HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY, LONDON, ONT. STARTED ehtek0, Immediate delivery. Re- member, It's net too late to got fall and w180 .inbtlar to 5014° , withIiamntheseton, eb1011Ont.0, Bray Hatnhery, N. 22c — Heavy Breed Pullets — 20c A11 heavy breed pullets 120, A0er Tune 6th; 15o. See other advertisement for partlaulard, As0Orlod Pullets 20c, after June 16511, 160• HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY, LONDON, ONT. 8 WEEK OLD PULLETS: New Hampshire. 65.05. 'rwo week old Barred Rooks, New Iiampahire X Barred Rock on -nosed 19.06, pullets 20.90, rockmels 15.05• Light Suaoex X New Ii0mpohlreo, Barred Rook X New Hampahlreo; Non -sexed 10,06, pullets 50.06, oorkorola 15.05, 8 week old add 6.00. 4 week old add 16,00 per hundred to above prime. Day old cockerels, June prime: Barred Rocks. Light Suttees, L1eht Sueeor: X New Hampehlree 0.01, White Les11orna 1.00, Light Sumas X White Leghorn,, 1.60. Send for June Priem. Top Noteh Chick Soden, Guelph. Ontario. BARGAINS HEAVY BREED COCKERELS Thou*and available weakly, Send for epealal prices; 1 Rock x Leghorn; Suaeex x Leghorn: Now' HEMP x 00000111 Cockerels: 1 1-2 cents, Theta medium -bred cockerels are loot the thing for Brolterol HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY. LON- DON, ONTARIO. NO MATTER whether you are raiding obtakeae for lite eggs they will produce or to gall as brollors or 000010re you eon make more money if your chicks aro fray Quick maturlas, heavy laying ancestry, Our breedlns stook hag al. waya boon carefully ooleotod for bat result" In tho laying nosh.. However, we have not overlooked nor neglected the desired most qualities In developing our stook. Tweddle chicks are fast maturing, the kind that you want when purcbnslnt In Tuna We can give prompt delivery Oa day 01d, two, three and four week old m most popular pure breeds and cross breeds. Reduced prima for June. Also older pullets eight weel,, to laying. Free catalogue. Twaddle Chick Hatcheries Limited, ,'orgue, Ontario. 1054c — Hurondale Chicks — 11%e Assorted hoavy--breed mixed oblake 1115o. As- sorted I1ebt-breed mixed: 1082o. Pure Sumo', Sussex X New Hamps, Now Hamm, mixed: 14a. Pullets 25o. After Tune 6: mixed 19o; Pullet. 22c, Barred Rook, Rock X New Hamm 1.601 atter Tune 01 14c. Rook X Leghorn Sussex X Leghorn, New Hamp X Leghorn, Legltorna: mixed 100; pullets 57o. After Rahe 6; mixed 12c, pullets: 04o. After Juno 15: mixed 11c; pullets 22c, HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY, LONDON, ONT. IT'8 HENS In the nests that pay the belle. Your 0000000 In the poultry Matinees depende on tete quality of chicks you buy. not on the quantity. You cannotxpect high ec lay - Ins qualities In your pullet. ualeee they have high producing parento. It la only from e. strain of layers havins high seg leadeg re- cord. behind them, that high producing pullete can coma. We offer you thin 10105 of chicks. Write for reduced prices for Tune on day old. two, three and four week old chicks. Al,o older pullets eight weeks to laying. Fra catalogue. Ton Notate Chick Salon, Guelph. Ontario. 20,000 PULLETS 1-10-11.WEEKS-0LD, TO READY-TO.LAY For delivery 10 May, Tuna and July. These definitelullets y re notnot aside tolumeet They big have d for title ug0 of bullets. All floor raised under the moat ideal conditional Send for full nartienar9. LAKEVIEW POULTRY FARM. WEIN BROS., EXETER, ONTA1110 DYEING AND CLEANING HAVE YOU anything needs dyeing or Olean. Mgt Write to us for information. We are glad to answer your questions, Department H, Parhor'a Dyo Works Limited 701 Yonge Street. Toronto, Ontario. FOR SALE ACCORDIONS BUTTON 10 ireya 2 bane 21 toys 12 boa,, Mao 0000. 908 Ste. Catherloo W. Montreal. FOR SALE HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES Parte and Serytoo. Bort le menaces & Boa, 410 Colloeo Bt. TSronto. ,L6,TIOAC or0Wler tractor, full plosel, model A, 4.011., u0g5 4 mouths. Apply Carnegl Lumber Company, Port Perry, Ont, HI -POWERED littler—Write for de0orlptive folder° and prloeo. 8C0P10 8AI.E0 CO„ 110 Queen 8t., Ottawa, Ont. EAT HONEY. Nntura'a !Moot tweet, we will 0ppply a cum of 12 four -pound oars of de - 1o1,00 bite Battered clover honey for only 010.00. Order today white thio bargain prloa nets. Big Rock Farm, Mello Roobeu, Ont. 00-A012N dairy farm, 4 1-1 miles from Caledonia on county road. Good brick house. big bank barn. 12 aurae bush, Immem. ate paeseeeiou. Box 7, Caledonia, Ont. MAPLE Syrup, 1048 arop. Reasonable 901000, Order early. John M. ailleeolo• Abbotsford„ Quobeo, CONCRETE DRAIN TILE " to 10" dia. Contlnuouo 009917, Brantford Bulldero Supplloe Ltd., 45 Bruce St., Brant. ord, Ont.. Phone 1000M. 100 .ACRES. suitable for market garden or tobacco. About 06 aoree bath. 060 loge out. Coolletown vlolnaty. W, E, Kaowo, Arend Bend, O» tarlo. BOATS 47 Now Deluxe Cabin Crulaer, Sleeps two, Fully 00010005. Length twenty foot. Steep wont} m1108. Operation twenty hours, Many extras, Reduced to 00400. Terme. Box 650. Porry Sound. COMPLETE Homo (adulation Bervlco watt of Brantford, eolith of Oodrloh, Free calms. on blown In, Rock Wool or Fiberglas. Hellcat Roofing Ltd., 619 Waterloo, London. FREE 1 large Delphinium 7101 12.00 ordure. 12 beautiful perennial Manta 51.00 while they lost. Dime Nursorlea, Route 1, Wollaul FINEST Wood -burning brooders made id U.S.A. 680.00 delivered, Write for Fred Circular, Flynn Importing Co„ 8107 Darker Ave., Montreal 8. Que. GERMAN Shepherd 905910., bred from the World's floe,0 bloodllase. At Stud, Oham- pion Meet of BarrImor. flextime:. 1000001, 111 Barrington .Ave., Toronto. NAILS Stool, 10,000 kegs available of all u3e0. Writ" for prim list, Sherman*, Box 1006, Poe Station "C", Toronto, Can. WAR SURPLUS PAINT 11.75 per gallon and up. All colours moat,able including white, Manufactured by 0.I.1., Lowe Broe,, 8oarfe'., Moore,, Sherwin 'WA - llama Etc. Write for prime Bet. Sherman's. Box 1006, Poeta! Station •'C", Toronto, Oen. HAIRDRESSING LEARN Hairdressing the Robertooa method, Information on reouest regarding 01a0.0a, Roberteon'e Hairdroaomg Academy, 127 Ave- nue Road, Toronto. MEDICAL GOOD ADVICE, Every sufferer of Rheumatic Paine or Neuritis should try Dixon', Remeeddyy. Muaro'e Drug Store, 996 Elgin, Ottawa. Poet, - paid 11.00. HUNDREDS ENJOY GOOD HEALTH from the comblne.ttoo of Ingredients used to FER-8EK TONIC TABLETS. These lnsrodl- ento aro being uaod by medloai solonoe to root los. of appetite and run down ooddltlon It 7011 are tired, lienees or run do -ua feel the need of n Quick pick up SEND ND for FER-8EI1 tod_Fy, 2 w001te supply postpaid 61.00 MIK HEALTH PRODUCTS 1 l Box 25, Station K, Toronto IT'S IMPORTANT—Every sufferer 61 laity* oxalic Patna or Neuritis sBMW* try D Remedy, Munro'. Drug Store, 816 101gin, Ottawa. Postpaid 81.00. OPPORTUNITIEb FOR WOKEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dienade14 ltrofeesloo, good wng(p, thou.ends successful Marvel graduat89. America's greateot system. Illuetratad Ione tree. tree. wrlto or Ca11 MARVEL aA RDREBSING SCHOOLS 868 Blom St. W., Toronto Blanches: 44 King 8t., Hamilton, & 74 Rideau Street, Ottawa, PATENTS FETHERSTONAUGH & Compoar,Ipso� Sollcitore, Established 1800. 14 Klug Toronto. Toronto. Booklet of information on requ�' PERSONAL MARAZZA'S MUSIC SCHOOL Course by mall, with or without lnetrbmeabd. Write for free folder., P. Marra.. Ino„ 10A St, Catherine Weet, Montreal '18. 15411.1 WANTED CAPABLE experienced girl, general home- work, fond of children, private room, Reter- encea, 429 Palmerston Boulevard, Toronto, GRADUATE NURSES For general duty 1n small hospital, 8 -hour day. a -day week. Good salary. Apply Superinten- dent, nom:me I,feteorinl Hospital. Al'nonte, Ont. SINGL11 or married man for dairy tarot. Purebred hi0stSln., on It and R.O.P. A9ply Pomona Farm, Thameeford, Ont. "Girls GO for a Alan with a NUGGET shine" my'YOUR SHOES THIS: ,MQRNI,NG3 POP—Not Well Posted NE's oar NO MANNERS w,, 4 en OlSork (019045(1400100401, la 0 10,) -'" AND LET MG c -Io OVEFL By J. MILLAR WATT